![]() Bailey has an obvious comfort with both descriptive sex and action scenes and she keeps the author's pace rather than imposing her own. Though the stories are similar, each couple must defend their marriage in unique ways. Bailey's heroes are commanding but not irrational, which makes it easy to hear the villains. The men hide their finer feelings behind hard-earned shells of steel while the women hide their equally hard-won cores of steel behind soft-spoken demeanors and innocent sensuality.īailey's soft British accent lends appropriate foreignness to this trilogy set in ninth-century Norway and England. The three couples, Wolf and Cymbra, Hawk and Krysta, and Dragon and Rycca, are all well matched. But peace is not easily won either on the battlefield or in the marriage bed. Peace between them would give their common enemy, the Danes, a war on two fronts. ![]() With those unspoken words, Wolf Hakonson suggests the first alliance between Norse and Saxon. MLA style: "Dream of Me." The Free Library. ![]()
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